Answer:
Worship can be defined as the act of honoring and loving a deity, idol
or person in a “selfless” manner. The act of worship involves the total
self in giving praise, thanksgiving and reverence to that deity,
person
or material object. It is not a half-hearted affair, and it is only
after we distinguish between that which is and isn’t worship, with
regards to the divine objective, that we can begin to answer the above
question more fully. True, biblical worship, as defined by the scholar
A. W. Pink (1886 – 1952) in his exposition of the gospel of John, says
this: “It is a redeemed heart, occupied with God, expressing itself in
adoration and thanksgiving.” Likewise, A. W. Tozer said, “True worship
is to be so personally and hopelessly in love with God, that the idea of
a transfer of affection never even remotely exists.”
So, the true worship of God is distinguished by the following criteria:
first, it comes from the redeemed heart of a man or woman who has been
justified before God by faith and who is trusting in the Lord Jesus
Christ alone for forgiveness of sins. How can one worship the God of
heaven if his sin has not been dealt with? Never can that worship be
acceptable that proceeds from an unregenerate heart where Satan, self
and the world hold sway (2 Timothy 2:26; 1 John 2:15). Any worship, other than that from a “washed” heart, is vain.
Second, true worship of God comes from a heart that desires Him alone.
This was precisely where the Samaritan people erred; they sought to
worship both God and idols (2 Kings 17:28-41),
and this is reaffirmed by the Lord Jesus Christ when He discourses on
the subject of true worship with the Samaritan woman who came to fetch
water from the well. “You Samaritans worship what you do not know” (John 4:22).
These people worshipped God “half-heartedly” because their total
affection was not set on God. It is possible for even true believers to
fall into this second error. We might not assent to having physical
idols, like the Samaritans did, but what absorbs our will, our time, our
resources most of all? Is it careers, material possessions, money,
health, even our families? Let us cry out, like King David in Psalm 63:5,
“My soul will be satisfied as with the richest of foods; with singing
lips, my mouth will praise you.” Nothing less than God should satisfy
the heart of the regenerate man, and his response to that divine
satisfaction, comparable to the best food ever, is the fruit of lips
that sing God’s praise (Hebrews 13:15).
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